Kissinger: The world will slide into a catastrophe similar to the First World War if tension continues between Washington and Beijing
During the 1970s, US Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Henry Kissinger said that Washington and Beijing “are increasingly sliding toward confrontation and managing their diplomacy in a confrontational way”.
The 97-year-old former minister and national security expert, speaking to the editor-in-chief of Bloomberg Channel, warned the next President of the United States of America, Joe Biden, who won the presidential elections, according to media outlets, against drifting into this trend, indicating that he should reconnect bridges of communication.
Soon, with China after it was damaged during the years of President Donald Trump’s rule, in order to avoid a crisis that could lead to a catastrophic military confrontation.
Kissinger said during the opening session of the Bloomberg Forum on “the new economy” that “if there is no basis for a cooperative effort” between China and the United States of America, “the world will slide towards a catastrophe similar to the First World War”.
He explained that the military technologies available today will make “controlling” such a military disaster “more difficult” compared to previous major military disasters, adding that “the United States and China have never before confronted countries with almost the same strength of each”.
Thus, it is an unprecedented experience for each of them, and “we must avoid it turning into a conflict, and we hope that it will lead to cooperation efforts” between the two parties.
Kissinger wished that the common epidemic threat to all would be an opportunity to re-build bridges between Beijing and Washington once the new American president takes office.
